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Wikipedia

KSMO-TV

KSMO-TV (channel 62) is a television station in Kansas City, Missouri, United States, affiliated with MyNetworkTV. It is owned by Gray Television alongside CBS affiliate KCTV (channel 5). The two stations share studios on Shawnee Mission Parkway in Fairway, Kansas; KSMO-TV's transmitter is located in Independence, Missouri.

KSMO-TV
ATSC 3.0 station
CityKansas City, Missouri
Channels
BrandingKSMO-TV
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
KCTV
History
First air date
December 7, 1983 (40 years ago) (1983-12-07)
Former call signs
  • KEKR-TV (1983–1985)
  • KZKC-TV (1985–1986)
  • KZKC (1986–1991)
Former channel number(s)
  • Analog: 62 (UHF, 1983–2009)
  • Digital: 47 (UHF, until 2019)
Call sign meaning
Postal abbreviations of Kansas and Missouri
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID33336
ERP750 kW
HAAT358 m (1,175 ft)
Transmitter coordinates39°5′25.8″N 94°28′19.2″W / 39.090500°N 94.472000°W / 39.090500; -94.472000
Links
Public license information
  • Public file
  • LMS

Channel 62 in Kansas City began broadcasting as KEKR-TV in 1983, changing its call letters to KZKC in 1985. Originally owned by Media Central of Chattanooga, Tennessee, it suffered for most of its first decade on air from a management style more suited to stations in smaller markets, inferior programming, and a poor reputation. In 1988, the station was fined for airing an indecent film in prime time, attracting national attention. Financial issues also strapped KZKC, particularly after Media Central entered bankruptcy reorganization in 1987.

KZKC was sold out of bankruptcy to First American National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, in early 1990; the bank quickly sold the station to ABRY Communications. ABRY instituted a top-to-bottom overhaul of programming and facilities, changing the call letters to KSMO-TV in April 1991. The relaunched channel 62 cemented itself as the primary sports and children's station in Kansas City; from 1990 to 1995, viewership tripled and advertising revenue quadrupled. ABRY affiliated the station with UPN upon its January 1995 debut. The station also was the broadcast home of Kansas City Royals baseball for four years, further increasing its visibility.

Sinclair Broadcast Group exercised an option to buy KSMO-TV in December 1995. The station dropped UPN in January 1998 after a corporate dispute between Sinclair and the network; two months later, the station became the new Kansas City affiliate of The WB. With the company focusing on duopolies elsewhere and unable to buy a second station in Kansas City, Sinclair sold KSMO-TV to the Meredith Corporation, then-owner of KCTV, in 2005 after Meredith assumed operating control the year before. The station affiliated with MyNetworkTV upon the merger of UPN and The WB into The CW in 2006, and it also added newscasts from KCTV and other local programming to its lineup. Gray acquired Meredith in 2021, the same year that the station converted to ATSC 3.0 (NextGen TV) broadcasting.

History edit

KEKR-TV: Construction and launch edit

Several applications had been made for channel 62 in Kansas City in the late 1960s, including by Dick Bailey and TVue Associates,[2] but interest around the channel allocation started in earnest at the end of the 1970s, as several business ventures around the country analyzed using unused UHF channels in major cities to broadcast subscription television (STV) programming. In 1977, Buford Television of Tyler, Texas, and SelecTV of Kansas City, Inc., both made applications to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) seeking to establish channel 62 in Kansas City and use it to broadcast STV to paying subscribers, even though Kansas City had an area-wide cable system.[3]

You can build a two-bit Mickey Mouse station in Cape Girardeau, and it will be OK. You can't do that in Kansas City.

Gary Liebling, KEKR-TV's first engineering manager[4]

After reaching a settlement with Buford that gave it the right to buy stock in SelecTV of Kansas City,[5] that company was granted the construction permit on April 8, 1981, but channel 62 continued to sit unbuilt for more than two years. The permittee changed its name from SelecTV of Kansas City to Choice Channel of Kansas City in 1982, a year in which Kansas City and its metropolitan area were wired for cable at an accelerated pace[6] and the national economic picture for STV began to sour.[7] Choice Channel of Kansas City then took on a new majority investor: Media Central Inc. of Chattanooga, Tennessee, which purchased a 60 percent interest in the station in February 1983.[8] With Media Central on board, consideration of STV service was dropped and an agreement reached to co-locate its transmitting facility with public television station KCPT.[9] Media Central used modular construction methods: studio equipment was assembled in Chattanooga before being shipped to Kansas City for installation once the studio facility was completed.[10] However, its construction methods ultimately resulted in subpar equipment and poorer reception; at one time, the station volunteered to send repairmen to homes experiencing difficulty tuning it in.[4] In a January 1988 article in Channels magazine, a former station employee was quoted as saying that the high school in Shawnee Mission, Kansas, had better equipment than channel 62, though Media Central's corporate office in Chattanooga did have high-quality equipment.[11]

KEKR-TV—whose call letters represented an attorney who helped file for the license[12]—debuted on December 7, 1983, from studios in Blue Summit. It was the first new station in Kansas City since KYFC-TV, a Christian television station, began in 1978, and it was the first new general-entertainment independent since KSHB-TV went on the air as KBMA-TV in 1970. Programming consisted primarily of classic reruns, as well as a handful of first-run and new shows in the Kansas City area and Big Eight Conference college basketball.[13][14][15] The station, however, was far from an immediate success. In its first year on air, it attracted just three percent of the Kansas City viewing audience,[16] well below the six to eight percent its founding program director had set as a goal.[17] The station's lone bright spot was that it was drawing young people to watch cartoons in mornings and afternoons.[16] A new general manager, Steve Friedheim, was appointed in a management shakeup; when he attempted to gather public feedback, he found that nobody had heard of his station.[4] Three of his colleagues at his former employer, independent station WNOL-TV in New Orleans, followed him to Kansas City amid turmoil at the New Orleans station.[18]

KZKC: Revamp and indecency dispute edit

After a year, Media Central sought to turn the ailing station around by spending more money on programming and overhauling its image. In January 1985, the station changed its call sign to KZKC-TV, having decided not to purchase the designation KCKC from a radio station in California.[19] The new call sign did attract attention—from KCTV, the Kansas City CBS affiliate, which sued channel 62 a month after it made the change, citing a potential likelihood of confusion.[20] The lawsuit was heard by a federal judge in June 1986,[21] and the judge ordered KZKC-TV to simply become KZKC without the suffix.[22] In another fruitless attempt to improve its image, the station filed for channel 32 when the FCC made it available in Kansas City;[23] however, with multiple applicants proposing new stations in the market, an FCC administrative law judge ruled against its bid in 1991 and in favor of another group.[24]

One way the station tried to attract interest was its policy to only edit films where there were explicit sexual acts, leading to occasional shots of nudity.[25] On May 26, 1987, even after announcing it would start censoring frontal nudity the year before, KZKC aired the 1981 comedy-drama film Private Lessons, known for its frontal nudity and a plot involving a relationship between a high school student and a maid, in prime time.[26] Acting on a viewer complaint, the FCC opened an investigation into the station's broadcast of the film in January 1988, with possible sanctions including a formal reprimand, a fine, or even revocation of the station's broadcast license.[27] The case shed light on the practice of "stacking" titillating movies for ratings sweeps periods several times a year, a practice followed throughout Media Central's eight-station chain of independents.[28]

The FCC—operating with just three of five commissioners at the time—unanimously agreed the material was obscene and, on a 2–1 vote, fined KZKC $2,000 in June 1988. The fine represented the first punishment of a television station for airing obscene programming.[29][30] Media Central chairman Morton Kent called the fine "outrageous" and declared to Dennis McDougal of the Los Angeles Times that he would not pay.[31] However, the commission rescinded the fine in 1989 after a court ruling overturned changes to its "safe harbor" for indecent programming.[32]

By the time of the indecency investigation, Media Central had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization; in July 1987, the parent company and its eight stations—KZKC initially the lone exception—presented petitions for reorganization.[33] The firm had $68 million in assets but owed $50 million to creditors, including program suppliers;[28] KZKC's reorganization plan stated that paying off its debts could take 10 years.[34] The station's front office urged general manager Friedheim to barter advertising for goods and services wherever possible to save money.[4] The disposition of the company's stations lasted three years. Only in March 1989 did a Chattanooga bankruptcy court begin considering plans to sell some of the Media Central stations,[35] eventually approving a purchase of KZKC by one of Media Central's creditors, First American National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee. First American then contracted Act III Broadcasting, an Atlanta-based company with significant operations in Nashville, to run the station.[36] This was heavily delayed by appeals in federal court.[37] While that went on, Steve Engles—who then left when his bid to purchase Media Central-owned KBSI in Cape Girardeau was approved—improved KZKC's programming, signal, and on-air look.[38]

KSMO-TV: The independent rebuild edit

On February 7, 1990, a subsidiary of First American National Bank received KZKC's license,[39] with Act III taking over management duties. This was a short-term solution; Act III's contract precluded it from buying KZKC, and Act III president Bert Ellis noted that the bank was interested in selling.[40] Two and a half months later, the bank filed to sell the station to ABRY Communications. ABRY, which owned two independent stations in Baltimore and Cincinnati, promised to spend millions of dollars to replace the transmitting facility and purchase new movies for air on the station.[41] Additionally, the company announced it would move the station to new studios.[42] Even before the sale closed, the station aimed to prepare for a major overhaul and to capitalize on KSHB-TV, its primary competitor, having an increasing obligation to Fox programs.[43] It lured a series of college basketball broadcasts from channel 41 in part by having time to air Kansas and Kansas State coaches' shows.[44]

Many major changes and a large promotion campaign were implemented in March and April 1991. A three-week "Your Vote Counts" campaign was begun in March; ballots were placed at points around the city to allow viewers to vote on programming, following a model ABRY had successfully used at its WNUV in Baltimore.[45] The next month, the station relocated to the Cambridge Circle office park in Kansas City, Kansas, in studios that were twice the size of the Blue Summit facility built by Media Central;[46] the program lineup was shuffled, a new antenna was installed, and a children's club known as "Crew 62" was started. The station also changed its call sign to KSMO-TV, incorporating the postal abbreviations for Kansas and Missouri; a radio station in Salem, Missouri, agreed to share, and the O also allowed the station to insert a check mark in its logo in a nod to the voting campaign.[47][48] The outgoing KZKC call sign was labeled by Jim McDonald as "probably the worst call letters that any station in America could have chosen", being tough to say and hard to remember to the point that some people noted in Nielsen Media Research ratings diaries that they had watched programs which channel 62 carried but ascribed them to other local stations.[47]

The ABRY overhaul brought KSMO-TV credibility it had previously lacked. The station made an intensive push to become the market's sports station, picking up rights packages including Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, and UMKC basketball, Kansas City Blades hockey, and—starting in 1993—65 Kansas City Royals baseball games each year, which was more than longtime rightsholder WDAF-TV had ever carried in its 13-year relationship with the franchise.[49] In its last year, WDAF-TV had especially strained to juggle the Royals and NBC programming: Johnny Carson's final nights of The Tonight Show and several NBA playoff games in 1992 were seen on a tape-delayed basis to accommodate baseball telecasts.[50] To woo the Royals, the station telecast a baseball game between Kansas and Wichita State just to prove that it could commit to the sport.[51] The changes paid off: in 1993, twice as many Kansas City TV viewers watched KSMO-TV for more than 15 minutes per month than had done so just three years prior. Its total market share was seven percent, far better than the three percent registered in May 1990, before the ABRY acquisition.[52][53]

KSMO-TV also profited from a major change elsewhere in the Kansas City television market. As a result of a group affiliation agreement between Fox and New World Communications, the Fox affiliation moved from KSHB-TV to WDAF-TV in September 1994. WDAF-TV, however, did not take Fox Kids programming; the entire network lineup moved to channel 62,[54] making the station the only one in the market programming for kids and fueling large viewership increases, particularly in the early evening hours.[55] This also left syndicators of children's TV shows desperate for their programs to air in Kansas City to have to accept less-than-ideal time slots for their programs: general manager Jim McDonald was offered $100,000 in advertising support to place a children's show on KSMO-TV's schedule before 6 a.m., and he described the challenge of accommodating Fox Kids, The Disney Afternoon, and the forthcoming UPN Kids as "fit[ting] so many ten-pound turnips into a five-pound sack".[56]

Meanwhile, the Royals relationship grew somewhat strained midway through. In 1994, the national television rights to Major League Baseball moved to a new arrangement known as The Baseball Network, with games on ABC and NBC; this led to more nationally telecast games than the previous CBS national rights agreement. As a result, in June, KSMO-TV sued the Royals for breach of contract, objecting to having lost its exclusivity over Royals telecasts; the loss of prime-time games to The Baseball Network meant that the station's commitment to a minimum number of telecasts was filled by more day games. Further, the station charged in the suit that the ABC and NBC affiliates were charging less for advertisements in their Royals games than KSMO-TV.[57] The lawsuit never went to trial and was settled out of court that December.[58]

Sinclair ownership and affiliations with UPN and The WB edit

On January 16, 1995, KSMO-TV became the Kansas City charter affiliate of the United Paramount Network (UPN), which was created as a partnership between Paramount Television and Chris-Craft/United Television. KSMO-TV, the only available independent sought by two new networks—The WB and UPN—initially chose the latter on the strength of its primary attraction, Star Trek: Voyager.[59] Sinclair Broadcast Group had acquired an option to buy KSMO-TV and WSTR-TV in Cincinnati from ABRY in 1994, after ABRY had sold most of its other TV properties to Sinclair; the Maryland-based broadcaster opted in December 1995 to purchase the station for $18 million. In ABRY's ownership tenure, spanning 1990 to 1995, viewership tripled and advertising revenue quadrupled to $17 million; because Sinclair's rate had been previously set, it significantly underpaid compared to an estimated value of $60 million for the station.[60] The station continued to carry the Royals through 1996; however, due to UPN commitments, its game inventory dropped from 65 games in the first year of the contract to 53 games, the second-lowest exposure of any major-league franchise.[61] In 1997, the Royals moved to an 80-game package, with 30 cable telecasts on Fox Sports Rocky Mountain and 50 games broadcast over-the-air. The broadcast rights to the package were won by KMBC-TV and KCWB (channel 29), an affiliate of The WB which KMBC-TV managed.[62][63]

On July 21, 1997, Sinclair signed a long-term affiliation agreement with Time Warner, under which the group committed five of its UPN-affiliated stations to that network in 1998, with a sixth independent station to join in 1999.[64] KSMO-TV was not among the defecting stations and was one of six Sinclair-controlled outlets that would remain with UPN; in Kansas City, The WB had not had a broadcast affiliate until KCWB began broadcasting in 1996.[65] However, the high-profile move by Sinclair to move five stations from UPN to The WB, its direct competitor, led to a legal dispute between the companies. UPN sued Sinclair, alleging it had breached its affiliation contract by exiting it early.[66] At the end of December, Sinclair announced that KSMO would exit the network when its affiliation agreement ended on January 16, 1998.[67] The station then became an independent again, even as reports surfaced of renewed talks between Sinclair and UPN.[68] The network was left without a Kansas City affiliate for more than a month, but by late February, all signs pointed to KCWB taking on the UPN affiliation as KSMO negotiated with The WB.[69] This occurred on March 30, 1998; Kids' WB did not immediately move from channel 29 because of the Fox Kids program commitment at channel 62, with those blocks instead swapping stations later in the year.[70]

In the early 2000s, Sinclair laid the groundwork to introduce what would have been KSMO-TV's first local newscast, utilizing its News Central hybrid format. The station was approved to hire a news staff of two dozen; the newscast would feature local stories read by an anchor in Kansas City mixed with national segments from News Central's facility at Sinclair headquarters in Hunt Valley, Maryland.[71]

The Meredith years: consolidation with KCTV, affiliation with MyNetworkTV edit

On November 12, 2004, the Meredith Corporation, owner of KCTV, announced that it would acquire the non-license assets of KSMO-TV from Sinclair for $26.8 million, immediately assuming responsibility for KSMO's advertising sales and administrative operations under a joint sales agreement. It also had an option to buy the station if FCC rules so approved for a further $6.7 million.[72][73][74][75] Sinclair's decision to hand over sales and most other functions of KSMO-TV, with an option to sell it completely, was motivated by a corporate decision to focus on duopoly markets where it owned or could feasibly own two stations.[76] It created the third such combination in Kansas City, alongside KSHB-TV with KMCI-TV and, indirectly, KMBC-TV with KCWE (the former KCWB).[72] After the sale, KSMO-TV operations were moved to KCTV's offices in Fairway, Kansas.[77]

Meredith then filed to buy KSMO-TV outright in January 2005, a transaction that would require a failing station waiver from the FCC as there would be fewer than eight unique owners of TV stations in the market.[78] On the grounds that KSMO-TV's revenue and market share had steadily declined in the preceding five years,[77] the commission granted the waiver in September 2005, approving the transaction.[79][80][81]

On January 24, 2006, the respective parent companies of UPN and The WB—CBS Corporation and the Warner Bros. Entertainment division of Time Warner, announced that they would dissolve the two networks and create The CW Television Network, functionally a merger, beginning that fall.[82][83] Even though KSMO-TV had placed fifth in total-day ratings at the time of the Meredith purchase,[72] the company found that affiliation would not be financially viable and passed on The CW (which went to KCWE in early March);[84] instead, the station affiliated with MyNetworkTV, set up by Fox Television Stations to serve former UPN and WB affiliates spurned in the merger.[85]

In the late 2000s and early 2010s, KSMO experimented with a variety of local programs, including TeenStar, a weekly teen show co-produced with The Kansas City Star; weekly public affairs show Your Kansas City; bilingual Hispanic program Qué Pasa KC; film showcase CinemaKC; and high school football and Missouri Valley Conference and Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association college sports.[86] From 2011 to 2013, it was the television home of Sporting Kansas City soccer.[87]

Sale to Gray Television edit

On May 3, 2021, Gray Television announced its intent to purchase the Meredith Local Media division, including KSMO and KCTV, for $2.7 billion. The sale was completed on December 1.[88]

Newscasts edit

While Sinclair had first intended to establish a News Central newscast in Kansas City, that had not materialized by the time Sinclair outsourced most of KSMO-TV's operations to Meredith.[72] Meredith, however, pledged to extend KCTV's newsroom to KSMO-TV as part of its proposal to win the FCC waiver it needed to purchase the station.[78] The 30-minute KCTV 5 News at 9:00 debuted in October 2005, following the closure of the Meredith purchase, promising the same experience "lock, stock, and barrel" as the station offered at 10 p.m. even though KCTV general manager Kirk Black had previously declared it would have its own presentation style.[78][89] By 2010, the station was also airing a 7 a.m. morning newscast and simulcasting a noon newscast also aired on KCTV.[90]

On August 4, 2014, KCTV began producing a half-hour newscast at 6:30 p.m. for KSMO, utilizing the same anchor team as the 6 p.m. newscast on channel 5.[91] This newscast had been canceled by 2018, when KCTV shifted to airing news in the 7 p.m. hour.[92]

Technical information edit

Subchannels edit

The station's channels are carried in ATSC 1.0 format on the multiplexed signals of other Kansas City television stations:

Subchannels provided by KSMO-TV (ATSC 1.0)[93][94][95]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming ATSC 1.0 host
62.1 1080i 16:9 KSMO-TV MyNetworkTV KCTV
62.2 480i H & I Heroes & Icons KMBC-TV
62.3 Dabl Dabl
62.4 Cozi TV Cozi TV KCWE
62.5 Comet Comet

Analog-to-digital conversion edit

KSMO-TV shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 62, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal continued to broadcast on its pre-transition UHF channel 47, using virtual channel 62.[96] The station was then repacked to channel 32 in April 2019.[97]

ATSC 3.0 edit

Subchannels of KSMO-TV (ATSC 3.0)[97]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
5.1 1080p 16:9 KCTV KCTV / CBS  
9.1 KMBC-HD KMBC-TV / ABC  
29.1 KCWE-HD KCWE / The CW  
62.1 KSMO-TV MyNetworkTV  
  Subchannel broadcast with digital rights management

On August 24, 2021, KSMO-TV converted to ATSC 3.0 (NextGen TV) broadcasting as one of two 3.0 transmitters in Kansas City. KSMO-TV hosts the main subchannels of KCTV, KMBC-TV, and KCWE; those stations in turn broadcast its five subchannels in ATSC 1.0 format.[98]

References edit

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External links edit

  • KCTV website

ksmo, channel, television, station, kansas, city, missouri, united, states, affiliated, with, mynetworktv, owned, gray, television, alongside, affiliate, kctv, channel, stations, share, studios, shawnee, mission, parkway, fairway, kansas, transmitter, located,. KSMO TV channel 62 is a television station in Kansas City Missouri United States affiliated with MyNetworkTV It is owned by Gray Television alongside CBS affiliate KCTV channel 5 The two stations share studios on Shawnee Mission Parkway in Fairway Kansas KSMO TV s transmitter is located in Independence Missouri KSMO TVATSC 3 0 stationKansas City MissouriUnited StatesCityKansas City MissouriChannelsDigital 32 UHF Virtual 62BrandingKSMO TVProgrammingAffiliations62 1 MyNetworkTVfor others see SubchannelsOwnershipOwnerGray Television Gray Television Licensee LLC Sister stationsKCTVHistoryFirst air dateDecember 7 1983 40 years ago 1983 12 07 Former call signsKEKR TV 1983 1985 KZKC TV 1985 1986 KZKC 1986 1991 Former channel number s Analog 62 UHF 1983 2009 Digital 47 UHF until 2019 Former affiliationsIndependent 1983 1995 January March 1998 Fox Kids secondary 1994 1998 UPN 1995 1998 The WB 1998 2006 Call sign meaningPostal abbreviations of Kansas and MissouriTechnical information 1 Licensing authorityFCCFacility ID33336ERP750 kWHAAT358 m 1 175 ft Transmitter coordinates39 5 25 8 N 94 28 19 2 W 39 090500 N 94 472000 W 39 090500 94 472000LinksPublic license informationPublic fileLMS Channel 62 in Kansas City began broadcasting as KEKR TV in 1983 changing its call letters to KZKC in 1985 Originally owned by Media Central of Chattanooga Tennessee it suffered for most of its first decade on air from a management style more suited to stations in smaller markets inferior programming and a poor reputation In 1988 the station was fined for airing an indecent film in prime time attracting national attention Financial issues also strapped KZKC particularly after Media Central entered bankruptcy reorganization in 1987 KZKC was sold out of bankruptcy to First American National Bank of Nashville Tennessee in early 1990 the bank quickly sold the station to ABRY Communications ABRY instituted a top to bottom overhaul of programming and facilities changing the call letters to KSMO TV in April 1991 The relaunched channel 62 cemented itself as the primary sports and children s station in Kansas City from 1990 to 1995 viewership tripled and advertising revenue quadrupled ABRY affiliated the station with UPN upon its January 1995 debut The station also was the broadcast home of Kansas City Royals baseball for four years further increasing its visibility Sinclair Broadcast Group exercised an option to buy KSMO TV in December 1995 The station dropped UPN in January 1998 after a corporate dispute between Sinclair and the network two months later the station became the new Kansas City affiliate of The WB With the company focusing on duopolies elsewhere and unable to buy a second station in Kansas City Sinclair sold KSMO TV to the Meredith Corporation then owner of KCTV in 2005 after Meredith assumed operating control the year before The station affiliated with MyNetworkTV upon the merger of UPN and The WB into The CW in 2006 and it also added newscasts from KCTV and other local programming to its lineup Gray acquired Meredith in 2021 the same year that the station converted to ATSC 3 0 NextGen TV broadcasting Contents 1 History 1 1 KEKR TV Construction and launch 1 2 KZKC Revamp and indecency dispute 1 3 KSMO TV The independent rebuild 1 4 Sinclair ownership and affiliations with UPN and The WB 1 5 The Meredith years consolidation with KCTV affiliation with MyNetworkTV 1 6 Sale to Gray Television 2 Newscasts 3 Technical information 3 1 Subchannels 3 2 Analog to digital conversion 3 3 ATSC 3 0 4 References 5 External linksHistory editKEKR TV Construction and launch edit Several applications had been made for channel 62 in Kansas City in the late 1960s including by Dick Bailey and TVue Associates 2 but interest around the channel allocation started in earnest at the end of the 1970s as several business ventures around the country analyzed using unused UHF channels in major cities to broadcast subscription television STV programming In 1977 Buford Television of Tyler Texas and SelecTV of Kansas City Inc both made applications to the Federal Communications Commission FCC seeking to establish channel 62 in Kansas City and use it to broadcast STV to paying subscribers even though Kansas City had an area wide cable system 3 You can build a two bit Mickey Mouse station in Cape Girardeau and it will be OK You can t do that in Kansas City Gary Liebling KEKR TV s first engineering manager 4 After reaching a settlement with Buford that gave it the right to buy stock in SelecTV of Kansas City 5 that company was granted the construction permit on April 8 1981 but channel 62 continued to sit unbuilt for more than two years The permittee changed its name from SelecTV of Kansas City to Choice Channel of Kansas City in 1982 a year in which Kansas City and its metropolitan area were wired for cable at an accelerated pace 6 and the national economic picture for STV began to sour 7 Choice Channel of Kansas City then took on a new majority investor Media Central Inc of Chattanooga Tennessee which purchased a 60 percent interest in the station in February 1983 8 With Media Central on board consideration of STV service was dropped and an agreement reached to co locate its transmitting facility with public television station KCPT 9 Media Central used modular construction methods studio equipment was assembled in Chattanooga before being shipped to Kansas City for installation once the studio facility was completed 10 However its construction methods ultimately resulted in subpar equipment and poorer reception at one time the station volunteered to send repairmen to homes experiencing difficulty tuning it in 4 In a January 1988 article in Channels magazine a former station employee was quoted as saying that the high school in Shawnee Mission Kansas had better equipment than channel 62 though Media Central s corporate office in Chattanooga did have high quality equipment 11 KEKR TV whose call letters represented an attorney who helped file for the license 12 debuted on December 7 1983 from studios in Blue Summit It was the first new station in Kansas City since KYFC TV a Christian television station began in 1978 and it was the first new general entertainment independent since KSHB TV went on the air as KBMA TV in 1970 Programming consisted primarily of classic reruns as well as a handful of first run and new shows in the Kansas City area and Big Eight Conference college basketball 13 14 15 The station however was far from an immediate success In its first year on air it attracted just three percent of the Kansas City viewing audience 16 well below the six to eight percent its founding program director had set as a goal 17 The station s lone bright spot was that it was drawing young people to watch cartoons in mornings and afternoons 16 A new general manager Steve Friedheim was appointed in a management shakeup when he attempted to gather public feedback he found that nobody had heard of his station 4 Three of his colleagues at his former employer independent station WNOL TV in New Orleans followed him to Kansas City amid turmoil at the New Orleans station 18 KZKC Revamp and indecency dispute edit After a year Media Central sought to turn the ailing station around by spending more money on programming and overhauling its image In January 1985 the station changed its call sign to KZKC TV having decided not to purchase the designation KCKC from a radio station in California 19 The new call sign did attract attention from KCTV the Kansas City CBS affiliate which sued channel 62 a month after it made the change citing a potential likelihood of confusion 20 The lawsuit was heard by a federal judge in June 1986 21 and the judge ordered KZKC TV to simply become KZKC without the suffix 22 In another fruitless attempt to improve its image the station filed for channel 32 when the FCC made it available in Kansas City 23 however with multiple applicants proposing new stations in the market an FCC administrative law judge ruled against its bid in 1991 and in favor of another group 24 One way the station tried to attract interest was its policy to only edit films where there were explicit sexual acts leading to occasional shots of nudity 25 On May 26 1987 even after announcing it would start censoring frontal nudity the year before KZKC aired the 1981 comedy drama film Private Lessons known for its frontal nudity and a plot involving a relationship between a high school student and a maid in prime time 26 Acting on a viewer complaint the FCC opened an investigation into the station s broadcast of the film in January 1988 with possible sanctions including a formal reprimand a fine or even revocation of the station s broadcast license 27 The case shed light on the practice of stacking titillating movies for ratings sweeps periods several times a year a practice followed throughout Media Central s eight station chain of independents 28 The FCC operating with just three of five commissioners at the time unanimously agreed the material was obscene and on a 2 1 vote fined KZKC 2 000 in June 1988 The fine represented the first punishment of a television station for airing obscene programming 29 30 Media Central chairman Morton Kent called the fine outrageous and declared to Dennis McDougal of the Los Angeles Times that he would not pay 31 However the commission rescinded the fine in 1989 after a court ruling overturned changes to its safe harbor for indecent programming 32 By the time of the indecency investigation Media Central had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in July 1987 the parent company and its eight stations KZKC initially the lone exception presented petitions for reorganization 33 The firm had 68 million in assets but owed 50 million to creditors including program suppliers 28 KZKC s reorganization plan stated that paying off its debts could take 10 years 34 The station s front office urged general manager Friedheim to barter advertising for goods and services wherever possible to save money 4 The disposition of the company s stations lasted three years Only in March 1989 did a Chattanooga bankruptcy court begin considering plans to sell some of the Media Central stations 35 eventually approving a purchase of KZKC by one of Media Central s creditors First American National Bank of Nashville Tennessee First American then contracted Act III Broadcasting an Atlanta based company with significant operations in Nashville to run the station 36 This was heavily delayed by appeals in federal court 37 While that went on Steve Engles who then left when his bid to purchase Media Central owned KBSI in Cape Girardeau was approved improved KZKC s programming signal and on air look 38 KSMO TV The independent rebuild edit On February 7 1990 a subsidiary of First American National Bank received KZKC s license 39 with Act III taking over management duties This was a short term solution Act III s contract precluded it from buying KZKC and Act III president Bert Ellis noted that the bank was interested in selling 40 Two and a half months later the bank filed to sell the station to ABRY Communications ABRY which owned two independent stations in Baltimore and Cincinnati promised to spend millions of dollars to replace the transmitting facility and purchase new movies for air on the station 41 Additionally the company announced it would move the station to new studios 42 Even before the sale closed the station aimed to prepare for a major overhaul and to capitalize on KSHB TV its primary competitor having an increasing obligation to Fox programs 43 It lured a series of college basketball broadcasts from channel 41 in part by having time to air Kansas and Kansas State coaches shows 44 Many major changes and a large promotion campaign were implemented in March and April 1991 A three week Your Vote Counts campaign was begun in March ballots were placed at points around the city to allow viewers to vote on programming following a model ABRY had successfully used at its WNUV in Baltimore 45 The next month the station relocated to the Cambridge Circle office park in Kansas City Kansas in studios that were twice the size of the Blue Summit facility built by Media Central 46 the program lineup was shuffled a new antenna was installed and a children s club known as Crew 62 was started The station also changed its call sign to KSMO TV incorporating the postal abbreviations for Kansas and Missouri a radio station in Salem Missouri agreed to share and the O also allowed the station to insert a check mark in its logo in a nod to the voting campaign 47 48 The outgoing KZKC call sign was labeled by Jim McDonald as probably the worst call letters that any station in America could have chosen being tough to say and hard to remember to the point that some people noted in Nielsen Media Research ratings diaries that they had watched programs which channel 62 carried but ascribed them to other local stations 47 The ABRY overhaul brought KSMO TV credibility it had previously lacked The station made an intensive push to become the market s sports station picking up rights packages including Kansas Kansas State Missouri and UMKC basketball Kansas City Blades hockey and starting in 1993 65 Kansas City Royals baseball games each year which was more than longtime rightsholder WDAF TV had ever carried in its 13 year relationship with the franchise 49 In its last year WDAF TV had especially strained to juggle the Royals and NBC programming Johnny Carson s final nights of The Tonight Show and several NBA playoff games in 1992 were seen on a tape delayed basis to accommodate baseball telecasts 50 To woo the Royals the station telecast a baseball game between Kansas and Wichita State just to prove that it could commit to the sport 51 The changes paid off in 1993 twice as many Kansas City TV viewers watched KSMO TV for more than 15 minutes per month than had done so just three years prior Its total market share was seven percent far better than the three percent registered in May 1990 before the ABRY acquisition 52 53 KSMO TV also profited from a major change elsewhere in the Kansas City television market As a result of a group affiliation agreement between Fox and New World Communications the Fox affiliation moved from KSHB TV to WDAF TV in September 1994 WDAF TV however did not take Fox Kids programming the entire network lineup moved to channel 62 54 making the station the only one in the market programming for kids and fueling large viewership increases particularly in the early evening hours 55 This also left syndicators of children s TV shows desperate for their programs to air in Kansas City to have to accept less than ideal time slots for their programs general manager Jim McDonald was offered 100 000 in advertising support to place a children s show on KSMO TV s schedule before 6 a m and he described the challenge of accommodating Fox Kids The Disney Afternoon and the forthcoming UPN Kids as fit ting so many ten pound turnips into a five pound sack 56 Meanwhile the Royals relationship grew somewhat strained midway through In 1994 the national television rights to Major League Baseball moved to a new arrangement known as The Baseball Network with games on ABC and NBC this led to more nationally telecast games than the previous CBS national rights agreement As a result in June KSMO TV sued the Royals for breach of contract objecting to having lost its exclusivity over Royals telecasts the loss of prime time games to The Baseball Network meant that the station s commitment to a minimum number of telecasts was filled by more day games Further the station charged in the suit that the ABC and NBC affiliates were charging less for advertisements in their Royals games than KSMO TV 57 The lawsuit never went to trial and was settled out of court that December 58 Sinclair ownership and affiliations with UPN and The WB edit On January 16 1995 KSMO TV became the Kansas City charter affiliate of the United Paramount Network UPN which was created as a partnership between Paramount Television and Chris Craft United Television KSMO TV the only available independent sought by two new networks The WB and UPN initially chose the latter on the strength of its primary attraction Star Trek Voyager 59 Sinclair Broadcast Group had acquired an option to buy KSMO TV and WSTR TV in Cincinnati from ABRY in 1994 after ABRY had sold most of its other TV properties to Sinclair the Maryland based broadcaster opted in December 1995 to purchase the station for 18 million In ABRY s ownership tenure spanning 1990 to 1995 viewership tripled and advertising revenue quadrupled to 17 million because Sinclair s rate had been previously set it significantly underpaid compared to an estimated value of 60 million for the station 60 The station continued to carry the Royals through 1996 however due to UPN commitments its game inventory dropped from 65 games in the first year of the contract to 53 games the second lowest exposure of any major league franchise 61 In 1997 the Royals moved to an 80 game package with 30 cable telecasts on Fox Sports Rocky Mountain and 50 games broadcast over the air The broadcast rights to the package were won by KMBC TV and KCWB channel 29 an affiliate of The WB which KMBC TV managed 62 63 On July 21 1997 Sinclair signed a long term affiliation agreement with Time Warner under which the group committed five of its UPN affiliated stations to that network in 1998 with a sixth independent station to join in 1999 64 KSMO TV was not among the defecting stations and was one of six Sinclair controlled outlets that would remain with UPN in Kansas City The WB had not had a broadcast affiliate until KCWB began broadcasting in 1996 65 However the high profile move by Sinclair to move five stations from UPN to The WB its direct competitor led to a legal dispute between the companies UPN sued Sinclair alleging it had breached its affiliation contract by exiting it early 66 At the end of December Sinclair announced that KSMO would exit the network when its affiliation agreement ended on January 16 1998 67 The station then became an independent again even as reports surfaced of renewed talks between Sinclair and UPN 68 The network was left without a Kansas City affiliate for more than a month but by late February all signs pointed to KCWB taking on the UPN affiliation as KSMO negotiated with The WB 69 This occurred on March 30 1998 Kids WB did not immediately move from channel 29 because of the Fox Kids program commitment at channel 62 with those blocks instead swapping stations later in the year 70 In the early 2000s Sinclair laid the groundwork to introduce what would have been KSMO TV s first local newscast utilizing its News Central hybrid format The station was approved to hire a news staff of two dozen the newscast would feature local stories read by an anchor in Kansas City mixed with national segments from News Central s facility at Sinclair headquarters in Hunt Valley Maryland 71 The Meredith years consolidation with KCTV affiliation with MyNetworkTV edit On November 12 2004 the Meredith Corporation owner of KCTV announced that it would acquire the non license assets of KSMO TV from Sinclair for 26 8 million immediately assuming responsibility for KSMO s advertising sales and administrative operations under a joint sales agreement It also had an option to buy the station if FCC rules so approved for a further 6 7 million 72 73 74 75 Sinclair s decision to hand over sales and most other functions of KSMO TV with an option to sell it completely was motivated by a corporate decision to focus on duopoly markets where it owned or could feasibly own two stations 76 It created the third such combination in Kansas City alongside KSHB TV with KMCI TV and indirectly KMBC TV with KCWE the former KCWB 72 After the sale KSMO TV operations were moved to KCTV s offices in Fairway Kansas 77 Meredith then filed to buy KSMO TV outright in January 2005 a transaction that would require a failing station waiver from the FCC as there would be fewer than eight unique owners of TV stations in the market 78 On the grounds that KSMO TV s revenue and market share had steadily declined in the preceding five years 77 the commission granted the waiver in September 2005 approving the transaction 79 80 81 On January 24 2006 the respective parent companies of UPN and The WB CBS Corporation and the Warner Bros Entertainment division of Time Warner announced that they would dissolve the two networks and create The CW Television Network functionally a merger beginning that fall 82 83 Even though KSMO TV had placed fifth in total day ratings at the time of the Meredith purchase 72 the company found that affiliation would not be financially viable and passed on The CW which went to KCWE in early March 84 instead the station affiliated with MyNetworkTV set up by Fox Television Stations to serve former UPN and WB affiliates spurned in the merger 85 In the late 2000s and early 2010s KSMO experimented with a variety of local programs including TeenStar a weekly teen show co produced with The Kansas City Star weekly public affairs show Your Kansas City bilingual Hispanic program Que Pasa KC film showcase CinemaKC and high school football and Missouri Valley Conference and Mid America Intercollegiate Athletic Association college sports 86 From 2011 to 2013 it was the television home of Sporting Kansas City soccer 87 Sale to Gray Television edit On May 3 2021 Gray Television announced its intent to purchase the Meredith Local Media division including KSMO and KCTV for 2 7 billion The sale was completed on December 1 88 Newscasts editMain article KCTV News operation While Sinclair had first intended to establish a News Central newscast in Kansas City that had not materialized by the time Sinclair outsourced most of KSMO TV s operations to Meredith 72 Meredith however pledged to extend KCTV s newsroom to KSMO TV as part of its proposal to win the FCC waiver it needed to purchase the station 78 The 30 minute KCTV 5 News at 9 00 debuted in October 2005 following the closure of the Meredith purchase promising the same experience lock stock and barrel as the station offered at 10 p m even though KCTV general manager Kirk Black had previously declared it would have its own presentation style 78 89 By 2010 the station was also airing a 7 a m morning newscast and simulcasting a noon newscast also aired on KCTV 90 On August 4 2014 KCTV began producing a half hour newscast at 6 30 p m for KSMO utilizing the same anchor team as the 6 p m newscast on channel 5 91 This newscast had been canceled by 2018 when KCTV shifted to airing news in the 7 p m hour 92 Technical information editSubchannels edit The station s channels are carried in ATSC 1 0 format on the multiplexed signals of other Kansas City television stations Subchannels provided by KSMO TV ATSC 1 0 93 94 95 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming ATSC 1 0 host 62 1 1080i 16 9 KSMO TV MyNetworkTV KCTV 62 2 480i H amp I Heroes amp Icons KMBC TV 62 3 Dabl Dabl 62 4 Cozi TV Cozi TV KCWE 62 5 Comet Comet Analog to digital conversion edit KSMO TV shut down its analog signal over UHF channel 62 on June 12 2009 the official date on which full power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate The station s digital signal continued to broadcast on its pre transition UHF channel 47 using virtual channel 62 96 The station was then repacked to channel 32 in April 2019 97 ATSC 3 0 edit Subchannels of KSMO TV ATSC 3 0 97 Channel Res Aspect Short name Programming 5 1 1080p 16 9 KCTV KCTV CBS nbsp 9 1 KMBC HD KMBC TV ABC nbsp 29 1 KCWE HD KCWE The CW nbsp 62 1 KSMO TV MyNetworkTV nbsp Subchannel broadcast with digital rights management On August 24 2021 KSMO TV converted to ATSC 3 0 NextGen TV broadcasting as one of two 3 0 transmitters in Kansas City KSMO TV hosts the main subchannels of KCTV KMBC TV and KCWE those stations in turn broadcast its five subchannels in ATSC 1 0 format 98 References edit Facility Technical Data for KSMO TV Licensing and Management System Federal Communications Commission Ellingsworth Rosalind K October 24 1968 New Channels May Give TV Viewer Wider Choice The Kansas City Times p 5B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Nicely Steve January 12 1980 Firms Hope to Provide Subscription TV to Kansas City The Kansas City Times Kansas City Missouri p 1C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com a b c d Taylor Jeff February 6 1988 Indecency charge is just latest setback to hit Channel 62 The Kansas City Times Kansas City Missouri p A 1 A 24 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Nicely Steve August 12 1980 KC viewers to get a taste of pay TV Rival companies reach an agreement on using Channel 62 The Kansas City Times p A 1 A 4 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Uncertainty surrounds proposed TV station The Kansas City Times Kansas City Missouri January 19 1982 p B 3 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Jordan Gerald B January 3 1983 A progress report on Channel 62 The Kansas City Star p 2B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com For the Record PDF Broadcasting Taishoff Publications Inc February 28 1983 p 102 ProQuest 963236788 Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved September 7 2017 Jordan Gerald B July 20 1983 Channel 62 s plans to go on air remain up in air The Kansas City Star p 2B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Jordan Gerald B September 6 1983 Investors put their money on UHF channels The Kansas City Star p 2B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Berry John F January 1988 Anatomy of a Bankruptcy PDF Channels pp 70 72 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved March 1 2023 Garron Barry July 28 1985 Letter perfect combinations on the air Stations scour alphabet to find the right names The Kansas City Star p 1J 3J Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry December 7 1983 Channel 62 to sign on today as KEKR TV The Kansas City Star p 2B Archived from the original on February 2 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry October 31 1983 Channel 62 will be new but its programs won t The Kansas City Star p 2B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Pulliam Kent November 27 1983 New TV station committed to Big Eight basketball The Kansas City Star p Sports 24 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com a b Garron Barry November 21 1984 Channel 62 in ratings basement The Kansas City Star p 2B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry January 8 1984 The chess game of TV programming The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri p 1J 3J Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Landphair Ted December 9 1985 Real Independence Ends at Flashy Cash Thin WNOL TV New Orleans Business p 1A ProQuest 208906743 Garron Barry January 13 1985 Channel 62 is going after greater visibility The Kansas City Star p 1J 3J Archived from the original on February 2 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry February 25 1985 KCTV sues KZKC over new call letters The Kansas City Star p 6B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Henderson Joe June 10 1986 TV stations take suit on call letters to trial The Kansas City Star p 5B Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry July 22 1986 KZKC told to drop TV from name The Kansas City Star p 2C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Channel 62 seeks new spot on dial The Kansas City Star January 6 1987 p 2C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry January 5 1991 Channel 32 moving closer to reality The Kansas City Star p E 3 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry November 21 1985 Channel 62 creates a stir with movies The Kansas City Star p 2C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry May 27 1987 Edited movies still reveal more than some want to see The Kansas City Star p 2C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Taylor Jeff January 13 1988 Channel 62 faces indecency charge The Kansas City Times p A 1 A 10 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com a b McDougal Dennis February 16 1988 Station Gets Lesson in Decency The Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California p VI 1 10 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry June 23 1988 Channel 62 fined for indecency violation The Kansas City Star pp 1A 10A Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com FCC to decide whether to impose fine for prime time showing of sexy movie The Deseret News Deseret News Publishing Company Associated Press June 23 1988 Archived from the original on September 11 2017 Retrieved September 7 2017 McDougal Dennis June 27 1988 TV Indecency Fine Raises New Fears in Broadcasters The Los Angeles Times pp VI 1 4 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com FCC drops fine for indecency in KZKC case PDF Broadcasting August 14 1989 p 60 ProQuest 1016929972 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 Carter Reon July 8 1987 WKCH TV parent bankrupt The Knoxville News Sentinel Knoxville Tennessee p A10 Archived from the original on November 30 2021 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Perlmutter Rod November 25 1987 Troubled KZKC eliminates its late night movies The Kansas City Times p C 7 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry March 9 1989 Future of Channel 62 still in court s hands The Kansas City Star p 2D Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry April 12 1989 Atlanta firm is ready to operate Channel 62 The Kansas City Star p 2C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry February 2 1990 New manager of 62 faces uncertain future The Kansas City Star p 7C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry November 15 1989 Despite good deeds TV empire crumbling The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri p 2D Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry February 8 1990 Nashville bank assumes Channel 62 ownership The Kansas City Star p 2D Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry February 12 1990 Atlanta firm takes over as Channel 62 manager The Kansas City Star p 2C Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry April 25 1990 Boston company to buy Channel 62 The Kansas City Star p C 3 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry September 5 1990 New bosses big plans at 62 The Kansas City Star pp F 1 F 4 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry September 2 1990 Big changes just ahead on Channel 62 The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri pp TV 4 6 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry August 24 1990 KU K State to play ball on Channel 62 The Kansas City Star p E 2 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Channel 62 viewers to vote on programs The Kansas City Star March 16 1991 p E 2 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Akers Regina April 18 1991 City to help Channel 62 celebrate its impending move into KCK The Kansas City Star p Wyandotte County 1 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com a b Garron Barry March 28 1991 Channel 62 to change its letters The Kansas City Star p F 1 F 8 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry April 21 1991 Channel 62 tries for a new image Station juggles schedule changes call letters and cranks up the power The Kansas City Star p TV 4 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Covitz Randy January 10 1993 Executive turns sports into beacon for Channel 62 The Kansas City Star p C 2 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Covitz Randy January 10 1993 Royals shift follows industry trends The Kansas City Star p C 2 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Covitz Randy August 4 1994 Royals fall through TV crack The Kansas City Star p D 1 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry September 16 1993 KSMO TV flexes new muscles Independent station offers lots of variety to its growing audience The Kansas City Star pp F 1 F 2 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Sales manager at Channel 62 to become new general manager The Kansas City Star July 31 1990 p E 3 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry September 7 1994 Power Rangers heading for Channel 62 s schedule The Kansas City Star p C 1 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry October 29 1994 Ratings have surprise winner Big switch leaves KSMO in best shape The Kansas City Star pp E 1 E 2 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Driver s seat PDF Broadcasting amp Cable July 24 1995 p 85 ProQuest 1014776009 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 Garron Barry June 16 1994 Channel 62 sues Royals over TV deal The Kansas City Star p A 1 A10 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Covitz Randy December 24 1994 Channel 62 Royals put end to lawsuit over contract The Kansas City Star p D 5 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry July 28 1994 KSMO links up with fifth network United Paramount The Kansas City Star p E 5 Archived from the original on February 5 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Garron Barry December 13 1995 Sinclair Broadcasting to buy Channel 62 The Kansas City Star p F 6 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 via Newspapers com Covitz Randy August 16 1996 Royals agree to 80 game TV package The Kansas City Star p D 3 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Kaegel Dick Covitz Randy September 27 1996 Ticket prices to remain same The Kansas City Star p D 3 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved March 4 2023 via Newspapers com Royals TV picture now is crystal clear Channels 9 and 29 to carry over the air games in new set up The Kansas City Star October 18 1996 p D 1 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com McClellan Steve July 21 1997 WB woos and wins Sinclair PDF Broadcasting amp Cable pp 4 8 ProQuest 1016966796 Archived PDF from the original on January 11 2021 Retrieved June 8 2013 Butler Robert W August 24 1996 KCWB says hello WGN says goodbye The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri p E 1 E 10 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Barnhart Aaron August 9 1997 Corporate conflict raises doubts about Channel 62 UPN union The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri p E 4 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Barnhart Aaron December 30 1997 UPN set to fade from KSMO network may jump to KMCI The Kansas City Star p D 3 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Barnhart Aaron January 22 1998 Voyage of the lost network UPN may yet end on Channel 62 The Kansas City Star p F 10 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Barnhart Aaron February 26 1998 UPN expects trek to take it to Channel 29 The Kansas City Star p A 1 A 10 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Barnhart Aaron March 24 1998 Star Trek Voyager leads return of UPN shows to KC The Kansas City Star p D 3 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Barnhart Aaron November 13 2003 A new kind of news KSMO and corporate parent will present blend of local and national reports The Kansas City Star p E 1 E 6 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com a b c d Barnhart Aaron November 13 2004 CBS affiliate taking over WB station The Kansas City Star p C 1 C 6 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com KCTV owner pays 26 8M for WB affiliate s assets Kansas City Business Journal American City Business Journals November 12 2004 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved December 10 2016 Eggerton John November 12 2004 Meredith Creates Duopoly Lite Broadcasting amp Cable Reed Business Information Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved December 10 2016 Eggerton John November 21 2004 Deals Broadcasting amp Cable Reed Business Information BIA Financial Networks Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved December 10 2016 Walker Andrea K December 3 2004 Sinclair to sell Calif station to Viacom The Baltimore Sun Baltimore Maryland p 1D 8D Archived from the original on August 28 2022 Retrieved August 27 2022 via Newspapers com a b More local programming planned for Channel 62 KCTV buys KSMO license The Kansas City Star September 30 2005 p C 1 C 8 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com a b c King Suzanne January 27 2005 KCTV owner seeks KSMO license Meredith Corp seeks FCC waiver for the merger The Kansas City Star p C3 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com FCC approves sale of KSMO TV license Kansas City Business Journals American City Business Journals September 30 2005 Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 5 2016 Eggerton John September 29 2005 Meredith Buys Rest of KSMO Broadcasting amp Cable Reed Business Information Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved December 5 2016 Romano Allison February 13 2005 Station to Station Broadcasting amp Cable Reed Business Information Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved December 10 2016 Seid Jessica January 24 2006 Gilmore Girls meet Smackdown CW Network to combine WB UPN in CBS Warner venture beginning in September CNNMoney com Time Warner Archived from the original on March 16 2017 Retrieved August 3 2020 Carter Bill January 24 2006 UPN and WB to Combine Forming New TV Network The New York Times Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved February 10 2017 Barnhart Aaron March 8 2006 KCWE snags new network Affiliation with The CW is a minor coup for buyer Hearst The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri p C 1 C 8 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Romano Allison March 9 2006 My Network TV Signs Six Affils Broadcasting amp Cable Reed Business Information Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved December 10 2016 Barnhart Aaron June 28 2011 SMO local TV shows Cable channel 10 s programs include a big dose of grassroots content The Kansas City Star p D1 D3 Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Vaupel Andrew December 20 2016 Sporting KC s new TV deal sees it joining another major leaguer Kansas City Business Journal Archived from the original on December 24 2016 Retrieved February 5 2023 Gray Television Closes on Acquisition of Meredith Corporation s Local Media Group Press release Gray Television Globe Newswire December 1 2021 Archived from the original on December 1 2021 Retrieved December 1 2021 Barnhart Aaron October 19 2005 What s new on The WB The news The Kansas City Star Kansas City Missouri p F6 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 via Newspapers com Bachman Katy June 28 2010 Market profile Kansas City Mediaweek p 22 ProQuest 612718904 Engle Tim August 1 2014 KCTV 5 to launch 6 30 p m newscast on KSMO The Kansas City Star The McClatchy Company Archived from the original on August 19 2014 Retrieved August 15 2014 KSMO Kansas City Issues Program Report 1st Quarter 2018 PDF Online Public Inspection File Federal Communications Commission March 31 2018 Archived PDF from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved February 5 2023 RabbitEars TV Query for KCTV RabbitEars Archived from the original on August 25 2021 Retrieved August 25 2021 RabbitEars TV Query for KMBC RabbitEars Archived from the original on March 4 2023 Retrieved August 25 2021 RabbitEars TV Query for KCWE RabbitEars Archived from the original on August 25 2021 Retrieved August 25 2021 DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and Second Rounds PDF Federal Communications Commission Archived from the original PDF on August 29 2013 Retrieved March 24 2012 a b RabbitEars TV Query for KSMO RabbitEars Archived from the original on August 25 2021 Retrieved August 25 2021 Eight Stations Launch NextGen TV In Kansas City TVNewsCheck August 24 2021 Archived from the original on September 24 2021 Retrieved February 1 2023 External links editKCTV website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title KSMO TV amp oldid 1222473523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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